articleThe Plant CellMar 1, 2022HYBRID OA

The multiple fates of gene duplications: Deletion, hypofunctionalization, subfunctionalization, neofunctionalization, dosage balance constraints, and neutral variation

University of Missouri

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Gene duplications have long been recognized as a contributor to the evolution of genes with new functions. Multiple copies of genes can result from tandem duplication, from transposition to new chromosomes, or from whole-genome duplication (polyploidy). The most common fate is that one member of the pair is deleted to return the gene to the singleton state. Other paths involve the reduced expression of both copies (hypofunctionalization) that are held in duplicate to maintain sufficient quantity of function. The two copies can split functions (subfunctionalization) or can diverge to generate a new function (neofunctionalization). Retention of duplicates resulting from doubling of the whole genome occurs for…

Citation impact

278
total citations
FWCI
54.81
Percentile
100%
References
105
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Neofunctionalization
  • Subfunctionalization
  • Biology
  • Gene duplication
  • Genetics
  • Gene
  • Gene dosage
  • Functional divergence
No related works found for this paper.

Funding